Come on! Mac users are the ones obsessed with connecting everything and anything to their computers. Wrong market here, folks.
"My Mac runs my coffee maker, programs my DVR, turns on the lights before I get home and sends reminders to my phone to recharge it when the battery is low. Best of all, it does it all in that sexy 'Veronica' voice that's made me feel all tingly since 1984!"
Despite common perception, freedoms granted to US citizens aren't absolute (see other replies for why none of the freedoms and restrictions apply to non-US citizens).
For example, you can be arrested and/or fined for yelling "FIRE!" in a public space when there is no fire. Some may argue this is freedom of speech, but it infringes on the safety of others by potentially causing panic, so such speech is not protected for the sake of security.
Come on! Mac users are the ones obsessed with connecting everything and anything to their computers. Wrong market here, folks. "My Mac runs my coffee maker, programs my DVR, turns on the lights before I get home and sends reminders to my phone to recharge it when the battery is low. Best of all, it does it all in that sexy 'Veronica' voice that's made me feel all tingly since 1984!"
Despite common perception, freedoms granted to US citizens aren't absolute (see other replies for why none of the freedoms and restrictions apply to non-US citizens). For example, you can be arrested and/or fined for yelling "FIRE!" in a public space when there is no fire. Some may argue this is freedom of speech, but it infringes on the safety of others by potentially causing panic, so such speech is not protected for the sake of security.